| Literature DB >> 25000496 |
Lies Boelen1, Suzy Teutsch2, David P Wilson3, Kate Dolan4, Greg J Dore3, Andrew R Lloyd2, Fabio Luciani2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Shared injecting apparatus during drug use is the premier risk factor for hepatitis C virus (HCV) transmission. AIMS: To estimate the per-event probability of HCV infection during a sharing event, and the transmission probability of HCV from contaminated injecting apparatus.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25000496 PMCID: PMC4085033 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0100749
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic characteristics and injecting behaviours in the two study cohorts.
| Subjects characteristics | Prospective | Retrospective |
| N = 92 | N = 106 | |
| Age | 25 (18–39) | 24 (18–48) |
| Male | 64 (70%) | 75 (71%) |
| Duration of IDU in years: median (range) | 6 (1–22) | 6 (0–34) |
| Injecting heroin | 64 (70%) | 59 (56%) |
| Injecting methamphetamines | 60 (65%) | 43(41%) |
| Receiving MMT at enrolment | 21 (23%) | 26 (25%) |
| Mean number of IDU events per year | 199 (1–572) | 83 (6–572) |
| Reported sharing | 58 (63%) | 77 (73%) |
| Reported sharing of syringe/needle | 55 (95%) | 76 (99%) |
| Reported sharing paraphernalia (any) | 45 (78%) | 58 (75%) |
| Reported sharing Spoon | 41 (71%) | 56 (73%) |
| Reported sharing Mix | 27 (47%) | 41 (53%) |
| Reported sharing Filter | 29 (50%) | 41 (53%) |
| Reported sharing Swab | 3 (5%) | 17 (22%) |
| Reported sharing Tourniquet | 10 (17%) | 20 (26%) |
| Reported sharing only after bleach cleansing | 33 (57%) | 63 (23%) |
| Mean number of sharing events per year | 56 (1–364) | 47 (1–429) |
Estimate based on intermediate estimate from categorical data available on IDU frequency, for subjects who reported sharing.
Numerical quantification (in times per week) of the injecting and sharing events.
| A | |||||
| Prospective cohort | |||||
| Less than monthly | Monthly or more | Weekly or more | Daily | Daily or more | |
|
| 0.1/week | 0.29/week | 1/week | 7/week | 8/week |
|
| 0.15/week | 0.58/week | 3.5/week | 7/week | 11/week |
|
| 0.21/week | 0.87/week | 6/week | 7/week | 14/week |
Panel A. Numerical quantification (in times per week) of the injecting (both cohorts), and sharing events from categorical answers of the prospective cohort, provided by subjects during the HITS-p interviews to the questions “Since the last interview, how often did you inject drugs?” and “Since the last interview, how often did you use injecting equipment after someone else had used it?”. Panel B. Numerical quantification (as a percentage of the number of IDU events) of the sharing events in the retrospective cohort, based on the question “Since last imprisonment, how often did you use equipment after someone else had used it?”.
Figure 1Number of interviews with self-reported injecting and sharing behaviours in the prospective (A) and retrospective (B) cohorts.
Maximum likelihood estimate of the per-event probability of HCV infection during IDU events with sharing of injecting apparatus.
| Conservative | Middle | Progressive | |
|
| |||
| MLE estimate | 1.00% | 0.57% | 0.40% |
| Median | 1.02% | 0.57% | 0.40% |
| 95% CI | 0.53%–2.20% | 0.32%–1.05% | 0.23%–0.72% |
|
| |||
| MLE estimate | 0.56% | 0.42% | 0.32% |
| Median | 0.56% | 0.42% | 0.32% |
| 95% CI | 0.21%–2.5% | 0.17%–1.48% | 0.13%–0.99% |
* Estimated from bootstrap analysis using 10,000 simulations (see Materials & Methods).
Figure 2A. Sensitivity analysis to assess the effect of under-reporting of sharing during IDU.
Modelling of the effect of under-reporting of sharing during IDU on the estimate of the per-event probability of infection during IDU with shared equipment. On the x-axis, the proportion s of IDU events that are also sharing events is represented. Boxplots represent the simulation-based distribution of the MLE for the estimate (for comparison, the actual result from the reported sharing distribution in the cohort is also reported). B. Boxplots representing the distribution of the MLE for the transmission probability in the population, as a function of the assumed proportion injecting equipment actually contaminated with HCV.